Evolutionary Origins of Morality

Paul Armstrong

Paul Armstrong

Total Posts: 2

Joined 05-02-2011

Newbie

Total Posts: 2

Joined 05-02-2011

Posted: 05 February 2011 12:00

I’ve become interested in the Evolutionary Origins of Morality ever since I heard of the story (in Sagan’s Cosmos) of the monkey that starved itself rather than push the lever to get food which also gave a painful electric shock to his conspecific neighbor.

Does anyone know if Dr. Harris’ book confronts this issue, or should I look elsewhere?

Monkeys use tools for enforcing and establishing a moral order. Science is merely a tool. Religion is also a tool. Science may establish just as to how outmoded religion is as a tool. Religionists tend to not see their brains as tools (therefore not see their brains as a scientific tool), but tend to see their brains as truth itself (rather than a tool to discover the direction of truth). The consequence being that their beliefs become their truths. But belief is merely a function of the brain, and sometimes a belief may turn out to be a fact and sometimes turn out to be false when presented with other facts. Religion, therefore, is more like a monkey view of the world because it establishes a hierarchical moral order. A tribal form of moral order.

If monkeys can establish what is morally right without science, why do humans need science to establish same?

Because monkeys can fail in blatantly obvious ways and they have no way to discern one from the other.

Science is a set of methodologies we have developed over the ages for removing sources of factual error, illogical reasoning, and cognitive biases from our conclusions. Do you think you are better off leaving in known sources of errors, illogic, and bias?

We used to think it immoral NOT to beat children to teach them to behave—now we know it actually does long-lasting harm. We know this through careful observation and study.

That doesn’t mean that simple empathy-driven behaviors cannot be positive, it just means the less obvious questions require more careful thought sometimes.